Peter-John F. Hulson, Benjamin C Williams, Meaghan D. Bryan, Jason Conner, Matthew R Siskey
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Reductions in sampling effort for fishery-independent age and length composition: balancing sampling efficiency, data uncertainty, and workforce health
Unavoidable survey effort reduction has become a reality that must be accounted for in fisheries stock assessment. In addition, negative consequences to survey staff health due to repetitive motion injuries are becoming increasingly costly for managing agencies. In this study, we evaluated the outcomes of reductions in age and length data used in fisheries stock assessment models. The main goal was to determine whether sampling can be reduced to a level that does not excessively increase data uncertainty, yet provides a reduction in repetitive motions that can cause injury to survey staff. We found that reducing length sampling to a maximum of 100–150 fish sampled per haul (either sex-specific or combined sex) provides length composition data for which the uncertainty is not appreciably increased, and it has minimal effect on the uncertainty in age composition data that is subsequently expanded from this subsampled length frequency data. The method employed here, and the results presented, can aid management agencies to balance the magnitude of data collection and subsequent consequences to fisheries stock assessment models.
期刊介绍:
The Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences is the primary publishing vehicle for the multidisciplinary field of aquatic sciences. It publishes perspectives (syntheses, critiques, and re-evaluations), discussions (comments and replies), articles, and rapid communications, relating to current research on -omics, cells, organisms, populations, ecosystems, or processes that affect aquatic systems. The journal seeks to amplify, modify, question, or redirect accumulated knowledge in the field of fisheries and aquatic science.